The persistently sluggish lending business in the corporate sector shows that the economic engine in the eurozone does not want to start up. The ECB will therefore soon cut interest rates further, and you can also expect massive government spending programs, as we are dealing exclusively with left-wing Keynesians in Europe.
According to the European Central Bank (ECB), Eurozone banks didn't ease their credit standards for business loans in the second quarter of 2024. Demand for business loans continued to decline unexpectedly.
The ECB’s quarterly lending report highlighted that 3% more banks tightened business loan standards than those that loosened them, a figure banks had projected to be 6%. This tightening was consistent with the first quarter's figures, driven primarily by banks' risk tolerance, particularly in Germany and France.
Looking ahead, a 5% tightening is forecasted for Q3 2024. Credit standards cover interest rates, collateral requirements, loan durations, and repayment schedules, shaping the types of loans banks prefer and the conditions borrowers must meet.
A net 7% of banks reported a decrease in business loan demand in Q2, contrasting with the anticipated slight increase after a 28% drop in Q1
If I'm understanding this correctly (which is doubtful), it sounds like Europe's headed for the kind situation America was in during the last financial crisis. The Fed cut rates as much as possible, but banks still didn't want to lend.
reply
55 sats \ 1 reply \ @TomK OP 16 Jul
the regulatory policy in conjunction with the attempt to create a climate-panic economy is systematically driving companies away from the location. perhaps there is simply no longer any interest in setting up new companies or investing in their own growth
reply
Good point. If you're expecting businesses to take losses, why would you lend to them at any rate?
reply
Just imagine how much worse the eurozone would be if the USA didn’t subsidize their military spending!
reply
Maybe these green commie clowns would be forced to focus on their real economy....
reply
It is something serious since there are no credits, there are no companies, which is reflected in more unemployment which affects the common citizen.
reply
A good example of this is Germany's own policy of de-industrialization. last year alone, 156 billion euros in direct investments were withdrawn from Germany to other countries. the lion's share of this ended up in the United States or in Asian locations
reply